top of page
Search

A New Covenant for Saints

  • Writer: Ardith Arnelle `Price
    Ardith Arnelle `Price
  • Apr 30
  • 2 min read

Messiah Yeshua is the Lord God of Heaven and Earth and His blood was shed for mankind outside the gate known as the Tabernacle symbolically, this was to fulfill the Scriptures written about Messiah Yeshua in ancient times. He loves His children so much that He wants them to come back to Him, only by our own self-will not by coercing. Sin crept into the garden; the spiral descent of man to the grave of death came suddenly. The very second Eve ate the fruit and gave it to Adam; eyes were immediately opened too good and evil. This is why Adam immediately lied to Jehovah Elohim about what he had done and why he was hiding. God cannot be mocked. He is omniscience and whatever man does Jehovah knows about it and He sees us. “In the middle to the throne and around it were four living creatures, full of eyes in front and behind (Rev 4:6, TLV).”

He will come back and get His, children, at the end of this age which is now called the “End Times.” Messiah Yeshua promised, “for thou wilt not leave my soul in hell; neither wilt thou suffer thine Holy One to see corruption (Ps 16:10, KJV).”


Looking Through The Sea of Glass - Book
Looking Through The Sea of Glass - Book

By choosing Mount Moriah as the setting for Jesus’ crucifixion, God chose Golgotha, “the place of the skull,” the distinctive site of Roman executions. While Mount Moriah represented religious purity, kingship, and priesthood, Golgotha represented death, shame, and rejection. 


According to the Mosaic Law, sin offerings were to be taken outside the camp to be burned, representing the removal of sin from the community (Leviticus 16:27). Hebrews 13:11-12 directly ties this to Jesus’ crucifixion: By being crucified outside the city, Jesus fulfilled the role of the sin offering, bearing the sins of humanity.

Highlighting Jesus’ sacrifice at Golgotha underscores the shift to a new relationship with God—one established through Christ—distinct from the old Temple practices. This transformation marks a new way of worshiping the Messiah, moving away from previous methods.


 
 
 

Comments


bottom of page